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Court Strikes Out FG’s Amended Charge Against IPOB’s Nnamdi Kanu
Court has struck out FG’s amended charge against IPOB’s Nnamdi Kanu.
Newsone reports that the Federal High Court sitting in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital on Wednesday, May 18, struck out the amended six-count treasonable felony charge the Federal Government preferred against the detained leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, Nnamdi Kanu.
This online news platform understands that the presiding judge, Justice Binta Nyako struck out the charge after it was withdrawn by the Prosecution counsel, Mr. K. E. Kaswe.
Newsone Nigeria reports that Kaswe, who is from the Federal Ministry of Justice, withdrew the charge after Kanu’s team of lawyers led by Mike Ozekhome (SAN), accused FG of deliberately frustrating the speedy determination of the case.
Nnamdi Kanu’s lawyer Ozekhome noted that the amended charge was served on him, barely 48 hours before the court proceeding, stressing that FG introduced fresh issues in the amended charge, including additional documents and proof of evidence that was not originally attached to the case.
“My lord, in one of the attachments, pictures of lawyers waiting to have a meeting with the defendant at the DSS facility, were snapped with secret camera and displayed.
“Names of his lawyers- Ifeanyi Ejiofor and Maxwell Opara- were also mentioned. They have brought new issues and even changed the wordings of the charge. The fact that the court sustained only seven counts in the previous charge and the have now reduced it to six counts, means that the charge has already been altered”, Ozekhome submitted.
Nnamdi Kanu’s lawyer Ozekhome, therefore, said it was wrong for the Prosecution to insist on proceeding with trial, without firstly rearraigning the defendant.
Owing to Ozekhome’s contention, FG’s lawyer, Kaswe, applied to withdraw the amended charge to enable the matter to proceed to trial. Kaswe told the court that his first witness was available and ready to testify.
Consequently, Justice Nyako struck out the charge against Nnamdi Kanu.